Canadians get some national love from two great online services, in-flight Wi-Fi and Kindle books are steadily growing in popularity, iPhones' unflattering network history is explained, and Google says goodbye to its first self-ordered smartphone.

Wi-Fi Available on 1 in 3 U.S. PlanesPC World/Computerworld points out the growing ubiquity of Wi-Fi in air travel, with much more to come, and offers a really helpful list of in-flight connection pricing. [PCWorld]

Mint Canada?Mint.com founder Aaron Patzer jumps into the Get Satisfaction forums to point out that Mint has quietly added support for major Canadian banks, even if all the quirks ("cheque" is still "check") aren't addressed. (Thanks to pelux for the tip!) [Mint.com]

Bad Connection: Inside the iPhone Network MeltdownA great read on the roles AT&T, Apple, and consumer expectations played in making the iPhone's reception and call dropping problems the kind of joke that makes it all the way to late-night TV monologues. [Wired/Magazine]

Google to Stop Selling Nexus OneIt wasn't a hot seller, and its pledged multi-carrier, no-contract support evaporated after launch. Still, the Nexus One lives on as a phone for developers wanting the newest Android builds. [Wired/Gadget Lab]

Kindle eBooks outselling Hardcover Books on AmazonIn the past month alone, the eBook-to-hardcover difference grew from 43 to 80 percent more. Paperbacks are still king, but it seems like the Kindle price cuts might be moving the market forward. [GeekTonic]